From the desk lamp to the desktop?

The future of wireless: illumination as information A bright idea coming out of Germany's Fraunhofer Institute could change the way we connect to the Internet in the future, as well as drive the nascent market for interior LED lighting. Researchers there have found a way to encode a visible-frequency wireless signal in the light coming from lamps and fixtures, turning the light that surrounds us into a high-speed broadband source. That's not to say there's anything particularly wrong with radio-frequency wi-fi, but its limited bandwidth restricts it to a certain spectrum within an already crowded field of signals. It also leaks through walls -- a benefit for signal pirates but a detriment for those who want a signal that is both secure and free of interference. Visible-frequency wireless works by flickering all the lights in a room ever so slightly -- so slightly, in fact, that the human eye could never detect it. Incandescent and fluorescent bulbs can't flicker fast enough, so the scheme

From the desk lamp to the desktop?

In the future, getting a broadband connection might be as simple as flipping on a light switch. In fact, according to a group of researchers from Germany, the light coming from the lamps in ...

Tue 9 Mar 10 from PhysOrg

Future of broadband: Where data is broadcast using desk lamps, Tue 9 Mar 10 from ScienceDaily

From The Desk Lamp To The Desktop?, Tue 9 Mar 10 from RedOrbit

The Light from Your Desk Lamp Could Carry Broadband Signals

The future of wireless: illumination as information A bright idea coming out of Germany's Fraunhofer Institute could change the way we connect to the Internet in the future, as well as ...

Wed 10 Mar 10 from Popular Science

LED lights may be the future of broadband

BERLIN, March 10 (UPI) -- German scientists say they've created a data connection that uses light produced by lamps to encode a wireless broadband signal.

Wed 10 Mar 10 from UPI

LED lights may be the future of WiFi, Wed 10 Mar 10 from UPI

Broadband wireless from a desk lamp?

The Optical Society of America has highlighted an upcoming presentation at an annual optics conference San Diego in which the researchers from Germany will describe a method for encoding a wireless ...

Wed 10 Mar 10 from R&D Mag

  • Pages: 1

Bookmark

Bookmark and Share